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Retroactive nomenclature

 
Wikipedia: Retroactive nomenclature

Retroactive nomenclature is the telling of the earlier history of a person, place or thing while referring to said person, place or thing by a name that came into use at a later date.

One easily understandable example of retroactive nomenclature is an Anglo-American tradition that a woman adopts the surname of the man she marries while remembering her "maiden name" as the way she was referred to her pre-marital days. Radio talk-show host Michael Medved once made the statement: "Hillary Clinton used to be conservative when I knew her in our college days." But in Hillary Rodham's college days she was not yet married to Bill Clinton; therefore there was no "Hillary Clinton" at that time. However, such a case as this is easily understood that he meant the woman who later became Hillary Clinton.

After a crown prince ascends to a throne, people may use the new monarch's style when talking about acts the monarch did before becoming king or queen.

Chinese emperors are posthumously given temple names, used in most references to emperors from the Han to the Ming Dynasty. Most of these are agreed upon posthumously.

When people today read ancient histories, confusion sometimes results from the fact that in earlier ages historical characters changed their names more often than is common for people to do today, and ancient historians often told earlier stories using later names.

The Bible often uses retroactive nomenclature when telling its histories. Some skeptics, unaware of the ancient custom of frequent name changing and later references to persons or places by names that came into use after the fact, dispute some of its histories on this basis.

The names Sodom and Gomorrah, which were given to the cities the Bible records as having been destroyed by fire, are understood to mean "scorched" and "ruined heap", and some skeptics discredit the story as fiction on the basis that these names could have been given only after their destruction; whereas conservatives believe these names were given after their destruction and remained in use posthumously, though the cities were likely called by different names during the time in which they thrived.

Job's name means "Afflicted", though he was probably not called that until after the time when he was afflicted. Skeptics have sometimes disputed his existence on this basis.

It is possible that King David's name during his boyhood and youth was Elhanan, and his father Jesse, likewise, had the earlier names of Jaare-Oregim and Jair. Although he was not known as "David" until later, one Biblical account (1 Samuel chapter 17) tells the story of his slaying the Philistine giant Goliath, while still calling him David. In 2 Samuel 21:19 he is called Elhanan.

Other biblical characters who were known by different names at different times include Abram/Abraham, Sarai/Sarah, Esau/Edom, Jacob/Israel, Naomi/Mara, Solomon/Jedidiah/Qoheleth. Some believe Abraham’s second wife Hagar was the same woman as Keterah, who is mentioned as his wife after Sarah's death.

"Jew" originally meant a person from the nation of Judah (called "Judea" by the Grecian and Roman Empires), which came into existence after the reign of Solomon, when the nation of Israel was divided in two. Those from Israel prior to then, the Hebrew slaves in Egypt, as well as the Patriarchs from whom they descended, were not "Jews" in this technical sense, but Jewish historians still refer to these earlier ancestors as Jews, and this is acceptable on the grounds that it is retroactive nomenclature.

A few decades after the Ford Model T was introduced, off-road vehicles with towing capability and station wagon bodies, known as SUVs, were introduced to the market; but the term SUV would not come into use until the 1980s. Before that, people referred to them as station wagons, making no linguistic distinction between those based on sedan and truck platforms.

Also, the [[First World War] was not known as such when it was being fought and immediately after; it was so named only starting the Second World War. It was known, instead, as the Great War.

See also


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Retroactive nomenclature" Read more